The outrageous questions came from all over. Yet only a few media members had hilarious ensembles to go along with their ridiculous inquiries. One guy dressed as Mozart. Another, Danish TV reporter Tommy Kjaersgaard, decided to be Waldo.

Kjaersgaard simply stood in the crowd while his producer approached players, asking them the pertinent question: “Where’s Waldo?”

“Everyone is saying ‘Where’s Waldo?’ and (the players) are trying to find me,” said Kjaersgaard, dressed in that classic white Waldo shirt with horizontal red stripes (and also Carolina Blue pajama pants).

Kjaersgaard estimated this is his fifth or six time covering the Super Bowl. It’s his first acting like this.

“We saw all the goofy personalities and we decided this year, let’s be goofy,” Kjaersgaard said.

Kjaersgaard and his team didn’t actually interview any athletes Tuesday. That’s for later in the week, he said. Waldo was, however, the interviewee about 20 times, roughly 19 more than Lynch.

After dodging interviews for most of the season, Lynch reportedly lasted 6 ½ minutes before excusing himself from the mayhem.

He later returned, wearing sunglasses, and conducted a brief one-on-one with Deion Sanders. Their interview was standard compared to what was happening around them.

A question posed to Baldwin: “I’m unfamiliar with the 12th man, so I have to ask you — I think it’s unfair that when you play on the football field, you have 12 people on the football field and the opponent has 11. You are breaking the rules by having 12 people on the field.”

Baldwin politely explained that “the 12th man” is merely a nickname for the Seattle crowd.

“That makes more sense,” the reporter replied.

Some other zingers: “Are you single?”

“Do you go with the seven-layer dip or the salsa for the tailgate party?”

“Hey Doug, is this a must-win football game?”

Baldwin chuckled at that one.

“Obviously, it’s the Super Bowl,” he said. “It’s win or go home. The last game of the season.”